US plan calls for hunting pirates by land and air

In this photo taken Wednesday, April 30, 2008, the MS Columbus cruise ship is seen passing through the Suez canal in Ismailia, Egypt. German cruise operator Hapag-Lloyd said Tuesday Dec. 9, 2008, that the MS Columbus will evacuate passengers before sailing through waters off the Somali coast and fly them to the next port of call to protect them from possible pirate attacks. The ship will drop off its 246 passengers at the port of Hodeidah in Yemen, before the ship and some of its crew sail through the Gulf. The passengers will take a charter flight from there to Dubai and spend three days at a five-star hotel waiting to rejoin the 150-meter (490-foot) vessel in the southern Oman port of Salalah for the remainder of a round-the-world tour that began in Italy.(AP Photo)
— AP

In this photo taken Wednesday, April 30, 2008, the MS Columbus cruise ship is seen passing through the Suez canal in Ismailia, Egypt. German cruise operator Hapag-Lloyd said Tuesday Dec. 9, 2008, that the MS Columbus will evacuate passengers before sailing through waters off the Somali coast and fly them to the next port of call to protect them from possible pirate attacks. The ship will drop off its 246 passengers at the port of Hodeidah in Yemen, before the ship and some of its crew sail through the Gulf. The passengers will take a charter flight from there to Dubai and spend three days at a five-star hotel waiting to rejoin the 150-meter (490-foot) vessel in the southern Oman port of Salalah for the remainder of a round-the-world tour that began in Italy.(AP Photo)
/ AP

UNITED NATIONS 
The U.S. is proposing to track down Somali pirates not only at sea, but on land and in Somalian air space with cooperation from the African country's weak U.N.-backed government.

The United States on Wednesday circulated a draft United Nations Security Council resolution on the issue. It proposes that all nations and regional groups cooperating with Somalia's government in the fight against piracy and armed robbery "may take all necessary measures ashore in Somalia."

The proposal marks one of the Bush administration's last major foreign policy initiatives.

If the U.S. military gets involved, it would mark a dramatic turnabout from the U.S. experience in Somalia in 1992-1993 that culminated in a deadly military clash in Mogadishu followed by a humiliating withdrawal of American forces.

Piracy off Somalia has intensified in recent months, with more attacks against a wider range of targets. There was an unsuccessful assault on a cruise ship in the Gulf of Aden, which links the Mediterranean Sea, the Suez Canal and the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean. In September, pirates seized a Ukrainian freighter loaded with 33 battle tanks and on Nov. 15 they seized a Saudi oil tanker carrying $100 million worth of crude.

About 100 attacks on ships have been reported off the Somali coast this year. Forty vessels have been hijacked, with 14 still remaining in the hands of pirates along with more than 250 crew members, according to maritime officials.

The U.S. resolution is to be presented at a session on Somalia Tuesday with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

It proposes that for a year, nations "may take all necessary measures ashore in Somalia, including in its airspace, to interdict those who are using Somali territory to plan, facilitate or undertake acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea and to otherwise prevent those activities."

The draft also says Somalia's government – whose president wrote the U.N. twice this month already seeking help – suffers from a "lack of capacity, domestic legislation, and clarity about how to dispose of pirates after their capture."

The resolution is aimed at taking measures to stabilize the long-violent and lawless Somalia, a senior U.S. official said Wednesday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about it on the record. Though a number of countries have sent naval forces and taken other steps to stop the piracy, the efforts have been considered "very uncoordinated' so far, a second U.S. official also said privately.

Earlier this month, the Security Council extended authorization for another year for countries to enter Somalia's territorial waters with advance notice and to use "all necessary means" to stop acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea.

Nations entering Somali waters to fight piracy and armed robbery along the country's 1,880-mile coastline, the continent's longest, must first obtain approval from the Somali government and give advance notice to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

But now the U.S. believes the fight must go ashore.

Other international forces have fared poorly in the past trying to help Somalia, whose latest government was formed in 2004 with the help of the U.N. and is backed by Ethiopia. The country has been without an effective government for nearly 20 years.